Frying Pan Tower Live Stream

svnmag

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This is a good watch when having a few beverages. Wish I'd thought of if when the hurricane was going through:

http://explore.org/live-cams/player/shark-cam

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How about one of these at the base of the Garrison dam?!!
 
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svnmag

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Always my girls:



th


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Real. Effing A:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2QkmmDvkLSI

Anyways; "Frying Pan" is good beverage viewing.

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Good stuff in jeans and a Les Paul with a tremolo: So awesome I can't believe it:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A-mOmGG4R34

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Anyways; when this comes back on line I hope Nancy watches the feed, It would make life better. I hope it (Frying Pan) didn't get destroyed.

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I wonder if Ann, Nancy and Gretchen are cousins. Holy hell at a barbeque...
 
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svnmag

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Sand tigers are whore sharks. They are not the only species to be identified when the cam is up.

Do they also occur on the Left like striped bass which I wish were in Sak and the Tailrace along with pure strain muskie and redfish? I'm about sport not pristine retardation.

Stripers were transported and dumped on the left coast like huns and pheasants. I saw several huns in Iraq.

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California Striped Bass Fishing

This section has 3 subsections. Don't miss anything, visit them all!




Follow this link to see a photo of a 87 Pound Striped Bass caught in California.



San Francisco Bay
Courtesy of US
Geological Service
Link to larger image

California Striped Bass


History


In 1879, 132 fingerling striped bass were introduced into the San Francisco Bay, after surviving a long train ride across the US from the Navesink River in NJ. These did well, and an additional 300 fingerling made the same train ride three years later.
The fish prospered, as the San Francisco Bay is a large estuary incorporating an extensive delta which is formed where the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers empty into the Bay.
By 1889 striped bass were being caught in sufficient numbers that a commercial fishery began. The commercial fishery was later determined to be detrimental to the maintenance of a strong recreational sport fishery. Commercial fishing was stopped in 1935 when the striped bass was declared to be a game fish.

sfbay_stripers_250.gif
Early San Francisco Bay Stripers

Most Pacific stripers spend summers feeding on anchovies in the ocean along the Pacific Coast. Many wander along the coast. Significant populations of striped bass have developed in Oregon; particularly in Coos Bay and the Umpaqua River.
Where the Stripers Are


Along the California Coast most stripers
re-enter the San Francisco Bay in fall and winter, and locate throughout the Bay and delta system. In spring the stripers head up the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers to spawn. They travel as much as 124 miles upstream in the Sacramento River and also go into the Feather River.

Some of the best striper fishing is found in the Sacremento River south of Butte City between the towns of Knights Landing and Colusa.
In the delta region, the water is mildly salty where the river and bay waters mix. Striped bass linger there, adjusting to the difference in salinity before they transit up the rivers to spawn, and again when they return to the Bay.
Some stripers inhabit the San Francisco Bay area year round. Many stripers, however, head back to the Pacific Ocean after spawning in the spring.
In the summer striped bass head north along the California coast to beyound Point Reyes and as far south as Montery Bay. Surf fishermen fish for them along the California beaches during the summer months.
See: Surf Fishing for Striped Bass in California.

Concerns



hank_ferguson_250.jpg
Hank Ferguson and his
record freshwater striped bass


A major threat to maintaining a large striper population in the Bay area is the significant number of freshwater diversion projects in the rivers. Increasing amounts of freshwater are being diverted to agricultural projects and the California Aqueduct System. Besides reducing the amount of freshwater available for spawning, the pumps associated with these projects often suck up striper larvae and fingerling stripers.
Surprisingly, some stripers survive their diversion, and even prosper. The current California sport record striped bass is a 67½ pound fish, caught by Hank Ferguson in O'Neill Forebay on May 7, 1992. In fact, many freshwater lakes and impoundments in California that are fed by the aqueduct system now contain significant populations of striped bass.
Hank Ferguson's striper is the previous world record freshwater striped bass.
On February 28th, 2013 James R. Bramlett caught a 69 pound 9 ounce landlocked striped bass and it became the new world record freshwater striped bass. Follow this link to see the new world record freshwater striped bass.



California Aqueduct Striper Video

To see a video of Striped Bass fishing in the California Aqueduct System follow this Link: Aqueduct Striped Bass Fishing


Fly Fishing the California Delta

A new book has recently come out about "Fly Fishing the California Delta." To see a description of this book follow this Link. Delta Fly Fishing Book



Use the search box below, to locate bait & tackle shops, marinas, restaurants, and
hotels in California.






Link back to the top







© Copyright 2007. All Rights Reserved. Advanced Systems.


 
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svnmag

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Now my feelings are hurt again.:mad: This thread has a variety of positive attributes and should have been discussed all day long like your mother's vagina.
 


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